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Oil Crisis Anniversary

Ecomonic Energy

Citizen: Oil Crisis Anniversary

This October marks the 40th anniversary of the 1973 Arab oil crisis. Although the price of oil is

still quite volatile in todays markets, we no longer see anything close to the supply disruptions

caused by the original oil crisis. For those of us who weren't around in 1973, it can hard to

imagine the impact on everyday life that the oil embargo had at that time. However, whether we

realise it or not, we all experience the political and economic aftermath of the oil crisis in our

everyday lives today.

There are many causes that contributed to the 1973 oil crisis but the trigger was definitely the

brief Yom Kippur war which pitted Israel, backed by the US, against Syria and Egypt. In

retaliation, the largely Arab based OPEC increased international oil prices by 70% over night.

This caused a huge shock to oil importing countries in North America and Europe that had been

used to relatively stable oil prices. Western countries responded with a number of measures that

are still with us to this day.

In the US, where the OPEC action was most felt, President Nixon declared the lofty goal of

making the US "Energy Independent". He failed of course, as did all subsequent American

presidents each one of them repeating the promise to make the US energy independent. Nixon

did however make some inroads into America's "oil addiction", as George W. Bush would later

put it.

To start, he imposed the national speed limit of 55 mph which is still prevalent through most of

the US. Most people today believe this speed limit was set for safety reasons, but it was actually

set to maximise fuel efficiency. Second, he introduced strict Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency

(CAFE) standards on all vehicles sold in the US. These CAFE standards are what allowed the

now ubiquitous smaller Japanese cars like Honda and Toyota to make their first beach head in

the American market. They were also responsible for bringing us the Pinto, and for neutering the

once mighty Mustang into the miserly Mustang II.

Here in Canada we also adopted 55 MPH speed limits as well as American CAFE standards

which still dictate Canadian fuel economy requirements. But the oil crisis' unique impact on

Canada was its impact on East/West political relations. Alberta's oil industry was just coming

into its own in the 1970's. When the oil crisis arrived it severely impacted the manufacturing and

processing economies of Central and Eastern Canada. In response, Pierre Trudeau imposed

the National Energy Program which attempted to siphon oil from Western Canada to Eastern

Canada at below market rates. The Liberals suffered heavily at the polls in Western Canada due

to the National Energy Program and have yet to recover.

It is a sign of just how important oil is to the global economy that a war that occurred 40 years

ago, on the other side of the world, and that lasted less than three weeks in total, could have a

significant impact on our everyday lives today here in northern BC. But it is true that our speed

limits, our efficient vehicles, on to a certain extent our political climate here in Western Canada

can all be traced back to that 1973 oil crisis.